Answer: whether, weather
Explanation: Looking at the Grey sky, Becky wondered WHETHER the WEATHER would ruin the class trip.
Weather and whether although having a similar pronunciation do not perform same function in a sentence.
Weather is used to describe the temperature and precipitation activity at a certain point in time while WHETHER is a word used as a condition between two likely outcomes.
To add strength to the argument that denying women the right to vote is unjust
<u>Answer</u>:
B: When running for a political office, a candidate must be willing to fight for his positions, to state his beliefs articulately, and look confident while doing so.
This statement has been written correctly.
<u>Explanation</u>:
Punctuation is very important in a writing. The reader can understand the meaning properly and even the writing appears more appealing. Without punctuation, correct meaning might not reach to the reader. He might lose his interest in reading.
Option B has correct punctuation marks, i.e. there is a comma after office and after positions. Also, “to state his beliefs” is grammatically correct. In other options, use of “stating his beliefs” in Option D and “to look confident” in Option C makes both the sentences grammatically wrong. In Option A, use of ‘state his beliefs’ and ‘to look’ are incorrect as well.